The Morbid History Podcast

MM#13 When Mama Sued The KKK

18 min · 1. apr. 2026
episode MM#13 When Mama Sued The KKK cover

Description

He was just going to the corner store.   In 1981, Michael Donald never made it home.   Two members of the Ku Klux Klan had been driving the streets of Mobile, Alabama with a gun and a rope — looking for any Black man they could find.   But this isn't just the story of a murder. It's the story of what his mother did next.   In this episode, we follow Beulah Mae Donald — a single mother from a Mobile housing project — as she took the most powerful Klan faction in America to civil court, and didn't stop until she had bankrupted the entire organization.   Because sometimes justice doesn't come from a gavel. Sometimes it comes from a mother who refuses to quit.   🎧 Take a bite of this Morbid Morsel. www.MorbidHistoryPod.com [https://www.thomasgloom.com/morbidhistorypod] Original music in this episode is provided by the talented: SHDWLRKR [https://soundcloud.com/user-693376863]

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33 episodes

episode MM#16 Behind Confederate Lines artwork

MM#16 Behind Confederate Lines

In 1861, Alabama seceded from the United States. Not everyone went along with it.   Deep in the hill country of northwest Alabama sat Winston County—a place of shallow soil, steep ridges, and small farmers who had no slaves, no plantations, and no interest in dying for a cause that wasn't theirs. When the state sent a delegate to the secession convention, Winston County sent a 21-year-old schoolteacher named Christopher Sheats with one instruction: Don't sign.   And he didn't.   In this episode, we travel to the county that told the Confederacy no… and paid the price for it in blood, imprisonment, and eighty years of punishment from a state that never forgave them for being right.   Because the South was never as unified as the monuments want you to believe.   🎧 Take a bite of this Morbid Morsel. www.MorbidHistoryPod.com [https://www.thomasgloom.com/morbidhistorypod] Original music in this episode is provided by the talented: SHDWLRKR [https://soundcloud.com/user-693376863]

24. juni 202613 min
episode MM#15 Run Like Hell artwork

MM#15 Run Like Hell

She just wanted to run. That's all.   Twenty years old, bib number 261, tucked into the middle of the pack on a cold, rainy morning in Hopkinton, Massachusetts. She had trained over a thousand miles for this. She was ready.   The men in charge had other ideas. She finished anyway.   In this episode, we lace up and follow Kathrine Switzer through the 1967 Boston Marathon that changed women's sports forever—the attack that tried to stop her, the men who failed her, and the twenty-four miles she ran alone after the world told her to quit.   Because sometimes the most radical thing a woman can do is simply refuse to stop.   🎧 Take a bite of this Morbid Morsel. www.MorbidHistoryPod.com [https://www.thomasgloom.com/morbidhistorypod] Original music in this episode is provided by the talented: SHDWLRKR [https://soundcloud.com/user-693376863]

27. maj 202613 min
episode Episode 15: Justice, Adjusted artwork

Episode 15: Justice, Adjusted

Some crimes have consequences. Others have currency.   In this episode, we examine history's untouchables—the scientists, executives, kings, and killers whose genius, wealth, or strategic value placed them beyond the reach of ordinary justice. From the Japanese bioweapons unit whose commanders were handed immunity in exchange for their data (Unit 731), to the Nazi rocket engineer America gave a new country and eventually the Moon (Wernher von Braun). Because there are two versions of justice. The one written in law. And the one that runs on who you are, and what you're worth, to the people in power.   The price was always paid. Just never by them.   Original music in this episode is provided by the talented: SHDWLRKR [https://soundcloud.com/user-693376863] www.MorbidHistoryPod.com [https://www.thomasgloom.com/morbidhistorypod]

13. maj 202647 min
episode MM#14 New Deal, Same As The Old Deal artwork

MM#14 New Deal, Same As The Old Deal

They called it the New Deal.   A promise. A lifeline. It was the most ambitious expansion of federal protection for working Americans in the nation's history, and was designed to pull a broken country back from the edge of collapse.   But buried in the fine print were some sneaky words that changed everything.   In 1935 and 1938, Southern Democrats struck a deal with the Roosevelt Administration. They would support the New Deal, but made sure to carve out the occupations held overwhelmingly by Black Americans.   Three laws. Three trapdoors.   In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the New Deal's darkest compromise—how the legislation that saved white America was deliberately engineered to leave Black America behind. Because sometimes the most effective forms of racism aren't the ones written in fire. They're the ones written in fine print.   🎧 Take a bite of this Morbid Morsel. www.MorbidHistoryPod.com [https://www.thomasgloom.com/morbidhistorypod] Original music in this episode is provided by the talented: SHDWLRKR [https://soundcloud.com/user-693376863]

29. apr. 202617 min